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This draft is a preliminary, editor-facing scaffold for an IndiaWiki article on the topic broadly described by the working title "Delhi Nursing" within the entrance examination cohort. It is intended to assist human editors in shaping a verified, neutral, and well-sourced encyclopaedia entry. The draft does not assert specific facts about any particular nursing entrance examination conducted in or for institutions located in Delhi, because such facts—conducting bodies, eligibility criteria, examination patterns, syllabi, application windows, counselling procedures, seat matrices, fee structures, and reservation policies—must be sourced from authoritative primary documents and reliable secondary reporting before publication.
The expected scope is an examination, or a category of examinations, used for admission to nursing programmes (which may include diploma, undergraduate, and postgraduate courses) at institutions situated in the National Capital Territory of Delhi. Such programmes are typically affiliated with universities or recognised by statutory regulatory bodies governing nursing education in India. Editors are advised to first determine, with citations, whether "Delhi Nursing" refers to a single named entrance examination, a colloquial umbrella term covering multiple exams, or a redirection candidate that should point to a more precisely titled article. Until that determination is made, all specific procedural and statistical content should be deferred.
Nursing education in India is regulated at the national level by statutory and professional bodies, and at the state level by directorates of medical education, state nursing councils, and affiliating universities. Admission to nursing programmes generally follows one of several pathways: a centralised national entrance test, a state-level entrance test, an institution-specific entrance test, or merit-based admission using qualifying examination scores. The exact pathway depends on the level of the programme (for example, auxiliary nurse and midwife courses, general nursing and midwifery diplomas, the Bachelor of Science in Nursing, post-basic Bachelor of Science in Nursing, and Master of Science in Nursing), the type of institution (government, autonomous, deemed-to-be-university, or private), and the regulatory framework in force at the time of admission.
Within Delhi, nursing programmes are offered at a range of institutions, including those attached to major hospitals, central universities, state universities, and private colleges. Editors should clarify which examination, conducting authority, and admission cycle the article seeks to document, and should refer to official notifications, prospectuses, and gazette entries to ground the article in verifiable detail. Care must be taken to distinguish between examinations conducted by central institutions and those conducted by Delhi-based authorities.
An accurate and well-cited article on a Delhi-based nursing entrance examination can be a valuable public-interest reference for prospective candidates, parents, educators, and researchers. Such articles aid aspirants in understanding the structure of nursing education pathways, comparing programmes, and locating authoritative information. They can also serve as historical records of policy changes, examination reforms, and shifts in regulatory authority over time.
However, the significance of the article depends entirely on the accuracy and currency of its content. Examination patterns, eligibility norms, and conducting authorities are revised from time to time, and outdated information can mislead readers and adversely affect candidates' decisions. Editors should therefore prioritise verifiability over completeness and should clearly date all procedural information so that future readers can assess whether the details remain current. Where information is provisional or has been recently changed, the article should say so explicitly and cite the relevant notification. The encyclopaedia's role is descriptive rather than advisory; the article should refrain from offering preparation guidance, coaching recommendations, or evaluative comparisons between institutions.
The following checklist enumerates areas where specific factual claims will be expected in the final article. Each item must be supported by an authoritative source before being added. Editors should treat any unverified information as a placeholder only.
Editors are reminded not to copy text directly from official prospectuses or other copyrighted material, and to paraphrase factual content while citing the source.
Once the topic has been precisely scoped, the final article may follow a structure broadly along the following lines, adapted to the specific subject:
This draft has been deliberately written without specific dates, numerical statistics, named office-holders, fee figures, ranking details, or allegations, because none of these can be reliably inferred from the working title and cohort alone. Editors must populate the article only with material drawn from authoritative sources such as official notifications, university or institutional prospectuses, statutory regulations, gazette entries, and reliable secondary reporting in established media outlets.
Before publication, the following review steps are recommended: first, confirm the precise subject of the article and consider whether a more specific title would better serve readers; second, verify each procedural and factual claim against a primary source and cite it inline; third, ensure neutrality of tone, particularly when describing institutions and authorities; fourth, mark all time-sensitive information with a clear reference date; fifth, remove any content that cannot be sourced. Editors should also consider whether the article ought to be merged with, or split from, related entries on Indian nursing education, Delhi-based educational institutions, or specific universities.
References to be added by editors. Suggested categories of sources include: official notifications issued by the conducting authority; prospectuses published by participating institutions; statutory instruments governing nursing education in India; gazette publications of the Government of India and the Government of the National Capital Territory of Delhi; and reports in reputable Indian news outlets. Each factual claim in the final article should be supported by an inline citation, and editors should avoid relying on coaching websites, aggregator portals, or user-generated content as primary references.